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* In what circumstances can the views of an individual scientist be indicative of the views of their community? (Jacob MacKinnon, Joshua Payne Smith)
* Is it possible for a community to say that they do not accept a theory, but in reality they do? Are there any historical examples of a case like this? (Jaqueline Sereda)
* The second law in its current formulation (as a conditional statement) allows for the possibility that a theory meets the requirements of the employed method but is not accepted. However the TSC's current position on the matter is that if the outcome of theory assessment is acceptance, the theory is necessarily accepted. How should TO-DO: reformulate the second law be reformulated to take this into account? . (Mirka Loiselle)* If a theory is accepted in violation of the second law, should we ignore this in our historical analysis, or should the TSC attempt to explain these instances? (Jacob MacKinnon)* Can we apply the "accepted/used/pursued" distinction to methods?* How do normative propositions (e.g ethics) affects method employment? Or does it only affect method "use"?* The 3rd Law states that a method is employed when it implements "some" abstract requirements of other employed methods. Doesn’t this pose a risk of “cherry-picking” abstract requirements? TO-DO: Reformulate 3rd law to specify which abstract requirements an employed method should implement. (Jacob MacKinnon)
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